Remember the word “unprecedented”? It was deployed during the pandemic — with some validity. The virus moved quickly. Countries were caught out. Death tolls mounted. Because the threat posed by Covid-19 was “unprecedented” (though historically, pandemics have occurred, the most deadly in recent memory being the 1918 “Spanish Flu”), the response had to be the same, which often produced problems. Rules were bent.
In our country, they were ignored. The legislation for vaccine mandates was passed under urgency in a move that academic Dr Dean Knight described as a “constitutional disgrace”. Division deepened; polarisation increased.
In some sense, this election result has been a referendum on the Covid response. The Labour Government started to consistently poll beneath National in early 2022, the time of the parliamentary protest.
And with the election over but the Government still to be decided, some are already saying that the issues our nation faces are “urgent”. A troubled health system. The faltering economy. Education results falling.
Given our experience with the ramifications of “unprecedented”, Christopher Luxon’s new — as yet unformed — Government needs to beware of such talk. Because, apparently, “urgent” issues can legitimise “urgent” responses and invoke the spectre of . . . urgency.